Question for some of you guys with all in 1 systems like Robobrew (@Clint ?), OneConcept (@Gulpitdarn ?) , Klarstein or Grainfather.....
At the moment I do half-size 10-12L (ish) BIAB batches rather than the full 20-25L. Currently I mash then dunk sparge, with 16L water in total, which gives me about 15L pre-boil. I'm also looking at switching to no-sparge for simplicity.
Could these smaller batches realistically be brewed with these systems or is there a minimum volume you need to do? I'm considering treating myself, and while I probably wouldn't spend Grainfather money the Robobrew/Klarstein price bracket looks like good bang for buck.
I was looking at some of @David Heath ' s YouTube videos summarising and comparing these systems and there was some suggestion that you need to adjust some filter parts to kinda sandwich your grain (might have misunderstood though!)
Some of my beers, sure I'd happily brew larger batches and solve the problem that way, but others where I'm experimenting more I don't necessarily want a huge 40pint batch of not-that-great-beer!
Any advice appreciated - Cheers,
Matt
At the moment I do half-size 10-12L (ish) BIAB batches rather than the full 20-25L. Currently I mash then dunk sparge, with 16L water in total, which gives me about 15L pre-boil. I'm also looking at switching to no-sparge for simplicity.
Could these smaller batches realistically be brewed with these systems or is there a minimum volume you need to do? I'm considering treating myself, and while I probably wouldn't spend Grainfather money the Robobrew/Klarstein price bracket looks like good bang for buck.
I was looking at some of @David Heath ' s YouTube videos summarising and comparing these systems and there was some suggestion that you need to adjust some filter parts to kinda sandwich your grain (might have misunderstood though!)
Some of my beers, sure I'd happily brew larger batches and solve the problem that way, but others where I'm experimenting more I don't necessarily want a huge 40pint batch of not-that-great-beer!
Any advice appreciated - Cheers,
Matt